3 Aug 2013

Leah Remini fears her taped personal confessionals could be leaked in 'retaliation for stepping away' from Scientology after 37 years with the church.

Last month she joined the crowd of Hollywood heavyweights who have cut off their ties from the Church of Scientology.But
just as Leah Remini, 43, is trying to focus on rebuilding her life
outside of the controversial religion, fears have been sparked that she
could become the victim of a smear campaign launched by the church
itself.According to The Hollywood Reporter,
the King of Queens star has taped over 37 years worth of private
confessionals, and the church is at will to use them or destroy them --
and some of the confidential information could be published online.The
news outlet chatted with another former Scientologist Karen de la
Carriere, a top executive who left in 2010 after 35 years in the
system.'When Leah and
her family made the decision to leave the church after having been
members for decades, the church immediately used disconnection against
them in retaliation,' de la Carriere alleged.Karen de la Carriere
also claimed when she rescinded her membership, the organization used
her private auditing sessions to brainwash friends and family into
cutting off contact with her -- and fears Leah could be in for the same
thing.While Remini announced this week that she plans on writing about her life growing up within the church in a tell-all book, The
Hollywood Reporter claims that the content of those
confessionals could end up being used for a website titled WhoIsLeahRemini.com -- with
the purpose of disseminating 'unfavourable material' about the actress.The Hollywood Reported noted that the domain was registered this week and mirrors similar sites created for Crash director Paul Haggis along with
former church spokesman Mike Rinder and former high ranking officials
Marty Rathbun and Amy Scobe -- all of which feature a handful of disparaging posts and videos about their involvement with the church.

'Thousands of personal files': The Church of Scientology reportedly keeps taped confessional videos from all of its members

'Dozens of WhoIs.com sites have been
published over the years, and those that are publicly accessible feature
unfavourable material about a number of detractors and former
supporters of Scientology,' THR wrote, claiming that the sites could be tied to the Church of Scientology itself.'Regarding "Who Is…" the church has never hidden the fact it supplied information for the websites.... Despite the chronic whining you hear
about the sites, each came about to document the truth about these
anti-religious fanatics,'Church
spokesperson Karin Pouw told The Hollywood Reporter. But
Pouw claims that the church is not affiliated with the site registered
in Remini's name, and as of Friday afternoon, content has yet to be
published to the site.

Tell-all: Leah revealed to Us that she plans on writing a memoir

Remini's sister Nicole Remini-Wiskow
claimed that Leah is being bullied by current members though she hasn't
formally been 'disconnected' or placed on the 'shunned' list -- what the
organization calls a 'Supressive Person.''Leah
hasn't been declared a Supressive Person. She hasn't been declared,
or... nobody said she was a Supressive Person,' Remini-Wiskow said in an
interview with Minnesota radio station myTalk 107.1.Remini-Wiskow clarified that when a person is placed on said list they must sign
specific paperwork, and that her sister 'has not signed anything.''She's just hanging in there. She's in good spirits,' she said.The Church of Scientology strenuously denied any of the sensational allegations made by Remini-Wiskow.

Church
spokesperson Karin Pouw released a statement to Radar Online saying
that the organization is not seeking to smear its former parishioner.

'The answer is unequivocally no because we do not release private and confidential information and never will. We
have responded countless times to this tired, false and outrageous
allegation made by a handful of obsessed self-promoters with transparent
agendas.'

Unofficial
mouthpiece: Nicole Remini (left) has been speaking out on behalf of her
actress sister Nicole, both are ex Scientologists

Fortunately
for Remini she still has the support of her family, who quit the
organisation in solidarity, despite being members for nearly four
decades.'Everybody
left... when this all came down, everybody had to make a choice whether
they were going to stick by Leah or stick by the church. So they all
left at the same time,' Remini-Wiskow told myTalk 107.1.

'They all had to make a choice of what they were going to do. This is how we are as a family. We stick together.'Remini-Wiskow continued: 'Soon this will be old news, as long as the church lets it go. Which I don't think will happen.'

Household name: Remini in a still for King of Queens with Kevin James and Jerry Stiller

Meeting place: A-list members of the Church of Scientology are specially cared for at the Celebrity Centre
International in Hollywood